He was dressed casually, but darkly. He did not want to be seen tonight. He wanted to blend in. He had to take a portkey to make it to Dublin, but he knew that Torrence was worth it. He was a good potioneer, or at least that’s what he heard in the streets. His first potion for Christoph had been all but completely perfect—tasteless, scentless, mimicked a heart attack. Lycidas had been dead in less than a minute, and there had been nothing to stop him—not even Christoph’s heroic attempts at reviving him. It had been easy, too easy to slip it into his drink. That death had been almost anticlimactic. Still, watching Luther fall apart had been very satisfying. He still hadn’t recuperated from the death of his firstborn, and soon his second heir would be out of the picture too.
His portkey had been late by a few minutes, and that had annoyed him, but he made his way to the meeting spot as quickly as he could. He was a few minutes after midnight, their meeting time, but he didn’t think Torrence wouldn’t show. He was glad that the other was already there, waiting. He felt a little guilty for making the other wait, but this would be quick, hopefully.
“Hello.†He greeted, in response to Torrence’s first words. He didn’t offer an apology or an excuse and just seemed to act like he hadn’t said a thing. “Thank you for meeting me.†He began. “Let’s get down to business.†He offered, sliding next to him, but not uncomfortably close. “I need something different this time. Another poison of the same type. Just like before, odorless, tasteless.†He explained. “However, it needs to do something different. Not a heart attack. I want it to look like a drug overdose.†Leoline was a junkie and everyone in the family knew it. It would be easy to spike his drug of choice with something letal and watch him hang himself with his own rope. No one would question it.
“I can pay you just like before, in cash or favor.â€